- Joined
- May 6, 2018
- Messages
- 891
Is there a way to remove the electrophoretic coating of the blade ? With minimal alteration and without using abrasive ?
I found this Patent CN101921502B. "A paint remover for removing a cathodic electrophoretic paint film on the surface of a steel plate. The paint remover comprises the following components in volume ratio: 20-90 parts of amine compound and 10-80 parts of ether compound. The preferable volume ratio of the components of the paint remover is: 80-90 parts of amine compound and 10-20 parts of ether compound. Theamine compound is one or two of formamide and N,N'-dimethylformamide; and the ether compound is one or two of butyl cellosolve and ethylene glycol. The two types of compounds are mixed proportionally to obtain the paint remover. During paint removal, the steel plate to be paint-removed is completely soaked in a solution of the paint remover, and the operating temperature range of the paint remover is 30-100 DEG C. The paint remover can meet the requirements of high pain removal speed, no corrosion to substrates, simple preparation, easy operation, convenient use and low toxicity to the human body."
OK That's cool, Is this king of product available ready to use, or I have to do home chemistry ? If someone could point me a commercial product that would do. It would be cool.
I found this Patent CN101921502B. "A paint remover for removing a cathodic electrophoretic paint film on the surface of a steel plate. The paint remover comprises the following components in volume ratio: 20-90 parts of amine compound and 10-80 parts of ether compound. The preferable volume ratio of the components of the paint remover is: 80-90 parts of amine compound and 10-20 parts of ether compound. Theamine compound is one or two of formamide and N,N'-dimethylformamide; and the ether compound is one or two of butyl cellosolve and ethylene glycol. The two types of compounds are mixed proportionally to obtain the paint remover. During paint removal, the steel plate to be paint-removed is completely soaked in a solution of the paint remover, and the operating temperature range of the paint remover is 30-100 DEG C. The paint remover can meet the requirements of high pain removal speed, no corrosion to substrates, simple preparation, easy operation, convenient use and low toxicity to the human body."
OK That's cool, Is this king of product available ready to use, or I have to do home chemistry ? If someone could point me a commercial product that would do. It would be cool.